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All Dogs Go to Heaven is the second extended play (EP) by the American musician Glaive.It was released on August 6, 2021, via Interscope Records.After recording his debut EP Cypress Grove (2020) in his North Carolina bedroom, Glaive garnered critical acclaim and travelled to Los Angeles to record All Dogs Go to Heaven in a studio during a two week period.
I Care So Much That I Don't Care at All is the debut studio album by the American musician Glaive, released on July 14, 2023, by Interscope Records.After gaining attention with a string of hyperpop songs released during the COVID-19 pandemic, Glaive signed a deal with Interscope, released three extended plays, and began collaborating with high-profile musicians.
Ash Blue Gutierrez (born January 20, 2005), known professionally as Glaive (stylized as glaive), is an American singer-songwriter.After posting a string of hyperpop songs to SoundCloud during the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic that earned him a following, he signed a record deal with Interscope Records and released his debut extended play, Cypress Grove, in 2020.
Eric George Lopez, [1] known professionally as ericdoa (stylized in all lowercase), is an American singer, songwriter, and record producer. He is known as one of the main artists in the hyperpop /digicore genres of music.
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Cypress Grove is the debut extended play (EP) by the American musician Glaive.It was released by Interscope Records on November 19, 2020. After recording music in his bedroom at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, Glaive became a leading force of the hyperpop genre and signed a deal with Interscope in October 2020.
Surgery could be on the horizon for Trevor Lawrence, but the Jacksonville Jaguars quarterback is active on Sunday and will start against the Houston Texans.
[32] The same year, prominent hyperpop musician Glaive stated that he and Ericdoa were "working on killing" the movement, [22] though three months later stated that it "will never die." [33] He later stated that the packaging of the community within the name 'hyperpop' for profit led to its music becoming "algorithmic" over time. [26]